Will AI Agents Take Jobs from Programmers?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 21 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 9

  • @panicraptor2837
    @panicraptor2837 10 місяців тому +3

    That main misconception comes from most people thinking that what we have today is actually AI.
    If it was, yeah we would be screwed.

  • @larsfaye292
    @larsfaye292 10 місяців тому +3

    Between snippets, autocomplete, libraries, frameworks and now generative AI tools, I write way less code today than I ever used to...yet the job has remained largely the same. It's almost as if the act of coding was never the job in the first place, but rather the problem solving, architecting, communicating, strategizing, iterating, deploying and (most importantly) supporting was the actual job of a developer/programmer. There's a reason that devs are the #1 users of this technology so far! 🤓

    • @tomski2671
      @tomski2671 10 місяців тому

      So less low level work, more high level work.
      However I believe we will figure out and use AI for planning soon enough.
      What remains then? Wishes?
      If so the damand is unlimited 😄
      PS Going forward good/accurate intuition will be an increasingly valuable "skill"

  • @code-dredd
    @code-dredd 10 місяців тому +3

    They will... until managers realize they can't unambiguously define and/or specify anything for 💩 😆

  • @ai-lucas
    @ai-lucas 10 місяців тому

    Comparing AI to the advent of the calculator or spreadsheet is a false comparison. Calculators never had a chance of learning how to improve themselves, potentially leading to an exponential rate of advancement.
    Plus if even a relatively limited ChatGPT can make a developer 5x productive, a business will be able to cut lower productivity developers. This is already happening. The tech companies are laying people off and finding they don’t need to replace them.

    • @StableDiscussion
      @StableDiscussion  10 місяців тому +1

      I appreciate the feedback and for watching the entire episode!
      I think specifically transformer llms are pretty similar to the calculator as they don’t have any self learning capabilities and require long training loops to update and incorporate new information. A faster self-reinforcing learning method isn’t really available even today in how you mean
      I do agree that when we do get to true self-directed reinforcement learning where AI learn from interactions and can reflect, that will be a different shift.
      Still, technology generally creates jobs as human “computers” lost their jobs to calculators. There was job loss there and the technology did result in exponential ability to calculate accurately which is a pretty big jump.
      Companies laying off employees now, if for that reason, are short sighted. I believe there will be a rebound as a lot of these companies look to reinvest in what more they can do and not just “floating” with the status quo of business as usual

    • @ai-lucas
      @ai-lucas 10 місяців тому +1

      @@StableDiscussion Thanks for the thorough reply!
      Yeah, agreed. I just think adding reinforcement learning may be right around the corner. But we will see!
      Personally I'm excited to trade my normal software job for one where I can leverage AI to get a lot more done. Hopefully, like you say, it doesn't hurt the chances of people trying to get into the field.
      The world is a complicated place, and AI is far from being able to do everything we do, but it has taken a big step in the past year.

  • @DJPapzin
    @DJPapzin 9 місяців тому

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 AI *agents aren't replacing developers.*
    01:29 AI *lacks real-world ambiguity.*
    03:03 Development *involves people.*
    04:36 AI *faces challenges in adaptation.*
    08:15 Technology *shifts, but job needs persist.*
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @homerbyrd1223
    @homerbyrd1223 10 місяців тому

    😂 Promo>SM